0 $0.00
items in your cartto quote Checkout
Ooops no items were found.
Try something else.
Ok
Loading…

Littmann Classic II Pediatric & Infant Stethoscopes:
Features, Performance & Clinical Applications

Complete clinical guide for nurses, pediatricians, NPs, medical students, and NICU clinicians

Quick Answer

Which Littmann Do You Need for Pediatric Patients?

Classic II Pediatric

Neonates through early adolescence. Tunable floating diaphragm, open bell, dual-sided chestpiece.

✓ Latex-free ✓ 5-year warranty

Classic II Infant

Premature and full-term newborns. Optimized for NICU and nursery settings. Tunable floating diaphragm, open bell.

✓ Latex-free ✓ 5-year warranty

Available at SurgoMed with fast US shipping.

Shop Littmann at SurgoMed →

 

What Are the Littmann Classic II Pediatric & Infant Stethoscopes?

The 3M Littmann Classic II line has long been a benchmark for reliable, professional acoustic performance across clinical settings. Within that family, 3M developed two specialist variants targeting young patients:

🩺

Infants through Early Adolescence

Classic II Pediatric

Designed for infants, toddlers, and children through early adolescence. The go-to option for general pediatric practice, outpatient clinics, and pediatric rotations. Features the Classic II dual-sided chestpiece tuned for the pediatric patient population.

👶

Neonates & Premature Infants

Classic II Infant

Optimized for neonates, premature infants, and NICU/nursery environments where chestpiece size is a critical clinical variable and acoustic precision is a patient safety issue. Smaller chestpiece and refined acoustic tuning for the most vulnerable patients.

Shared Classic II Platform Features

✓ Dual-sided chestpiece ✓ Tunable floating diaphragm ✓ Open bell ✓ Fully latex-free ✓ 5-year warranty

Both models share the Classic II platform but differ in chestpiece size, acoustic tuning, and intended patient population — distinctions that matter clinically when selecting between the two.

🔬

Did You Know?

A neonate's resting heart rate of 120–160 bpm compresses the cardiac cycle significantly compared to an adult's. Sounds overlap more, timing distinctions are harder to catch, and acoustic sensitivity matters far more than in adult auscultation. Standard adult stethoscopes are not optimized for this — the Littmann Classic II Infant is.

Why Pediatric & Infant Auscultation Requires Specialized Design

Adult stethoscopes are calibrated for larger thoracic structures, greater body mass, and the lower-frequency cardiac and pulmonary sounds those structures produce. Pediatric and neonatal patients present a fundamentally different acoustic environment that standard instruments are not built to handle reliably.

🫁

Smaller chest walls transmit sound differently

Less soft tissue damping means signal quality is affected by even minor chestpiece misalignment. Placement precision matters far more than in adult auscultation.

💓

Higher heart rates compress the cardiac cycle

A neonate's resting HR of 120–160 bpm makes precise differentiation of S1/S2 sounds, murmurs, and gallops significantly harder with a standard instrument not tuned for this range.

🔊

Higher-pitched murmurs are more prevalent

Newborns and infants produce murmurs in the mid-to-high frequency range that adult stethoscopes are specifically designed to de-emphasize, making them a poor diagnostic tool in this population.

📡

Oversized chestpieces introduce acoustic bleed

An adult-sized chestpiece placed on a small infant chest extends beyond the target auscultation zone, capturing ambient environmental noise and degrading signal clarity, a problem uniquely amplified in NICU environments.

Why a Purpose-Built Design Matters

A pediatric Littmann stethoscope addresses all four of these factors through purposeful size reduction, acoustic retuning, and patient-focused ergonomic design. These are not compromises, they are engineering choices that make the instrument more clinically accurate for its intended patient population. None of these outcomes are achievable by simply using a smaller adult stethoscope.

Dual-Sided Chestpiece Explained

Both the Classic II Pediatric and Classic II Infant feature a dual-sided chestpiece with a tunable diaphragm on one face and an open bell on the other. To switch between them, the clinician rotates the chestpiece stem — allowing seamless switching between acoustic modes without removing the instrument from the patient.

🔊

High-Frequency Sounds

Tunable Diaphragm Side

  • Breath sounds & lung fields
  • Normal S1/S2 heart sounds
  • High-pitched murmurs
  • Bowel sounds

Vary pressure to tune: light pressure for lower frequencies, firm pressure for higher frequencies — no mode switch needed.

🫀

Low-Frequency Sounds

Open Bell Side

  • S3 & S4 gallops
  • Low-pitched diastolic murmurs
  • Mitral stenosis sounds
  • Venous hums

Apply light skin contact only — pressing firmly converts the bell to a diaphragm, losing low-frequency fidelity.

🔄

How the Rotation Mechanism Works

🔊

Diaphragm Active

Aligned with tubing — bell port sealed & acoustically inactive

🔄

Rotate Stem 180°

No repositioning on patient — no disturbance to exam

🫀

Bell Active

Diaphragm port now sealed — low-frequency mode engaged

Critical in NICU Settings

The rotation mechanism is particularly valuable where minimizing patient stimulation is a formal clinical priority. For fragile premature infants, every unnecessary touch carries risk — the ability to switch acoustic modes without repositioning the chestpiece is not a convenience feature. It is a patient safety consideration.

Floating Diaphragm & Open Bell Technology

🔊

Primary Face

Tunable (Floating) Diaphragm

By varying the pressure applied during auscultation, the clinician shifts the acoustic response of the instrument — giving two distinct acoustic modes within a single diaphragm.

🤲 Light Pressure → Bell Mode

Lower-frequency sounds. Best for S3/S4 gallops, low-pitched murmurs, and subtle cardiac abnormalities.

👋 Firm Pressure → Diaphragm Mode

Higher-frequency sounds. Ideal for breath sounds, normal S1/S2 tones, bowel sounds, and high-pitched pediatric murmurs.

This pressure-sensitive tuning reduces the need to constantly switch to the bell, streamlining the examination — particularly valuable during fast-paced pediatric ED assessments or busy NICU rounds.

🫀

Reverse Face

Open Bell

Captures low-frequency sounds using the patient's own skin as a resonating membrane when lightly applied. The most effective method for detecting soft, low-pitched cardiac murmurs in neonates.

Clinical Tip

Skilled clinicians often use both sides during a single examination. The rotation mechanism makes switching fast and non-disruptive to the patient.

⚠️

Clinical Note: Pressure Matters

With a tunable diaphragm, applying too much pressure when trying to hear low-frequency sounds will shift the acoustic response toward higher frequencies — potentially masking exactly what you're listening for. Practice consistent, deliberate pressure variation to get the most out of the floating diaphragm technology.

Acoustic Sensitivity for Small Bodies

3M Littmann engineers the full acoustic pathway, chestpiece bore diameter, tube wall thickness, tubing material composition, and earpiece geometry — to maximize sensitivity in the frequency ranges most clinically relevant to small patients.

🎯

Smaller chestpiece diameter — reduced acoustic crosstalk

Limits signal capture to the precise target auscultation zone. On a premature infant whose entire anterior chest may be smaller than an adult-sized bell, this is not a comfort feature, it is a diagnostic necessity.

🔇

Thick-walled tubing — improved signal-to-noise ratio

Reduces ambient noise transmission through the tube walls, critical in noisy clinical environments like busy NICU bays, pediatric emergency departments, and open-plan nurseries.

👂

Anatomically oriented earpieces — improved acoustic seal

Angled to match the natural direction of the ear canal, reducing the pressure required to block environmental noise, important during long clinical shifts where fatigue affects examination technique.

🏥

Patient Safety Consideration

NICU Acoustic Sensitivity

For NICU stethoscope use, acoustic sensitivity is not a specification on a product sheet, it is a patient safety variable. The ability to detect the following depends entirely on the signal fidelity of the instrument in the clinician's hands:

Patent Ductus Arteriosus (PDA)

A subtle murmur in a premature infant that may be missed entirely with an inadequate instrument.

Early Respiratory Compromise

Subtle changes in breath quality, air entry asymmetry, or early wheeze in a 28-week infant.

Soft Cardiac Anomalies

Low-amplitude structural findings that require high acoustic fidelity to distinguish from normal neonatal heart sounds.

Comfort & Patient-Friendly Features

Beyond acoustic engineering, both models incorporate design features that reduce patient stress, improve the examination experience, and support clinicians through long shifts.

🌡️

Patient Comfort

Non-Chill Rim

Minimizes the cold-contact shock that causes infants and young children to startle, cry, and tense their chest muscles — all of which degrade auscultation quality and prolong the examination.

A calm, still patient produces a significantly cleaner acoustic signal than a distressed one.

⚖️

Clinician Comfort

Lightweight Construction

The smaller chestpiece means reduced overall instrument weight, less neck fatigue during long clinical shifts, and gentler contact pressure on a fragile neonatal chest wall where excessive force is contraindicated.

Reduced weight matters across a full NICU or pediatric ward shift that may span 10–12 hours.

👂

Acoustic Performance

Soft-Sealing Eartips

Provided in multiple sizes, formed to create an acoustic seal that blocks ambient noise without causing ear canal discomfort during extended use.

Key fact: A proper eartip seal is the single most important factor in acoustic performance after correct auscultation technique.

🎨

Clinical & Patient Benefits

Multiple Colour Options

Available in varied tubing and chestpiece colour combinations — serving two distinct clinical purposes:

👶

Pediatric wards: Colourful equipment reduces patient anxiety — children respond more calmly to visually approachable instruments.

🏥

NICU shared environments: Colour differentiation helps clinicians identify their personal instruments quickly in busy shared clinical spaces.

Pediatric vs Infant Models: Key Differences

The Classic II Pediatric vs Infant decision comes down to your primary patient population and the body sizes you routinely examine.

Feature Classic II Pediatric Classic II Infant
Primary Patient Range Neonates through early adolescents
(~0–12 yrs typical use)
Premature neonates, full-term newborns, young infants
Chestpiece Diameter Larger pediatric size (~38 mm) Smaller neonatal size (~30 mm)
Acoustic Tuning Balanced mid-range pediatric frequencies Optimized for higher-frequency neonatal sounds
Ideal NICU Use Older NICU graduates, term infants Premature infants, micropreemies, active NICU bedside
Bell Size Larger open bell Smaller open bell — targeted low-frequency detection
Typical Clinical Setting Pediatric ward, ED, outpatient clinic, pediatric rotation NICU, neonatal ward, nursery, neonatal transport
Dual-Sided Chestpiece
Tunable Diaphragm
Latex-Free
Warranty 5 years 5 years
💡

Clinical Rule of Thumb

👶 NICU & Nursery → Classic II Infant

Primarily premature and full-term newborns. The smaller chestpiece provides better acoustic isolation and signal clarity on very small bodies.

🩺 General Pediatrics → Classic II Pediatric

Toddlers, school-age children, and occasional newborns. Versatile across the full age range without sacrificing acoustic performance.

When in doubt:  NICU & nursery → Classic II Infant  ·  Everything else pediatric → Classic II Pediatric

Specifications & Performance Overview

Specification Classic II Pediatric Classic II Infant
Chestpiece Material Stainless steel Stainless steel
Chestpiece Sides Dual (diaphragm + bell) Dual (diaphragm + bell)
Diaphragm Type Tunable (floating) Tunable (floating)
Tube Length ~28 in / 71 cm ~28 in / 71 cm
Tube Configuration Single-lumen, dual-tube Single-lumen, dual-tube
Earpiece Type Soft-sealing, anatomically oriented Soft-sealing, anatomically oriented
Weight ~118 g ~113 g
Latex Content ✓ Latex-free ✓ Latex-free
Warranty 5 years 5 years
Country of Manufacture USA USA

Specifications may vary slightly by colour/edition. Always confirm with 3M Littmann's current product datasheet.

At a Glance: What Both Models Share

✓ Dual-sided chestpiece with rotation switching ✓ Tunable floating diaphragm ✓ Traditional open bell ✓ Anatomically oriented soft-sealing eartips ✓ Stainless steel chestpiece ✓ Fully latex-free construction ✓ 5-year 3M Littmann warranty ✓ Manufactured in the USA

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between the Littmann Classic II Pediatric and the Littmann Classic II Infant?

Classic II Pediatric

Larger chestpiece (~38 mm) · Infancy through early adolescence · General pediatric use

Classic II Infant

Smaller chestpiece (~30 mm) · Premature & newborn infants · NICU & nursery use

Both use the same dual-sided tunable chestpiece design, are fully latex-free, and carry a 5-year warranty.

Is the Littmann Classic II Infant suitable as a NICU stethoscope?
Yes. The Littmann Classic II Infant is widely used as a NICU stethoscope and considered a standard-of-care instrument in many neonatal intensive care units. Its small chestpiece allows precise placement on premature infants' chests without acoustic bleed, and the rotation switching mechanism minimizes patient disturbance during examinations.
Can I use the Classic II Pediatric as a neonatal stethoscope?

Full-term newborns: The Classic II Pediatric performs well and is an appropriate choice.

Premature or very low birth weight infants: The Classic II Infant's smaller chestpiece provides meaningfully better acoustic isolation.

Active NICU bedside with micropreemies: The Classic II Infant is the clinically preferred neonatal stethoscope.

What is the best stethoscope for a pediatric nursing or medical rotation?
The Littmann Classic II Pediatric is widely regarded as the best stethoscope for pediatric rotations among students and early-career clinicians. It offers professional acoustic performance, 3M Littmann build quality, dual-sided functionality that supports skill development across sound types, and a price point appropriate for a student or resident budget.
What is the best stethoscope for infants in a nursery or NICU?
The Littmann Classic II Infant is the most recommended stethoscope for infants in nursery, newborn, and NICU environments. Its purpose-built infant chestpiece size, tunable diaphragm, and open bell provide the acoustic fidelity needed for reliable neonatal assessment — including detection of subtle murmurs, early respiratory changes, and bowel sounds.
What does "pediatric chestpiece size" mean clinically?

Chestpiece size refers to the diameter of the acoustic aperture — the diaphragm or bell face — that contacts the patient's chest.

✓ Correctly Sized Chestpiece

Captures sound only from the area it directly covers — clean signal, accurate auscultation.

✗ Oversized Chestpiece

Extends beyond the target zone — captures ambient noise from surrounding tissue, degrading signal quality and diagnostic accuracy.

What is a pediatric rotation stethoscope?
A pediatric rotation stethoscope is used during the clinical pediatric rotation period in medical or nursing training. The Classic II Pediatric is a leading choice: correctly sized for pediatric patients, acoustically professional, and affordable enough for a student purchase while remaining credible in clinical settings.
Are these stethoscopes latex-free?
Yes. Both the Classic II Pediatric and Classic II Infant are fully latex-free, appropriate for use in environments with latex sensitivity protocols. This is a routine requirement in pediatric and neonatal care where latex allergies may not yet be formally identified.
Fully latex-free — both models
How long is the warranty?
Both models carry a 5-year warranty from 3M Littmann against defects in materials and workmanship, provided the instrument is used and maintained per 3M's care guidelines.
Can the Classic II Pediatric be used on adult patients?
While optimized for pediatric patients, the Classic II Pediatric can serve adequately on adult patients in a pinch — though the smaller chestpiece requires more frequent repositioning on adult-sized thoracic structures.

For clinicians working regularly across both adult and pediatric populations, the Littmann Classic III or Cardiology IV offers greater versatility.

Where can I buy the Littmann Classic II Pediatric or Infant in the US?

Both models are available at SurgoMed with fast US shipping. SurgoMed carries the full 3M Littmann stethoscope range across all color options and configurations.

Shop Littmann Classic II Pediatric & Infant Stethoscopes SurgoMed →

Available Now

Shop Littmann Classic II Pediatric & Infant at SurgoMed

Professional-grade pediatric auscultation. Trusted by clinicians. Built by 3M Littmann.

🩺 Classic II Pediatric

Neonates through early adolescence

👶 Classic II Infant

Premature & full-term newborns · NICU

✓ Fast US Shipping ✓ Full Littmann Range ✓ All Colour Options ✓ 3M Authorized

Sources & Further Reading

The following sources inform the clinical and technical claims in this guide. SurgoMed recommends consulting a qualified clinical specialist for facility-specific equipment protocols.

📄
3M Littmann Stethoscope Product Documentation
littmann.com
📄
American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) — Cardiac auscultation guidelines
aap.org
📄
Rushani D et al. (2013). Infants with congenital heart defects. Circulation, 127(18).
📄
Pelech AN. (2004). The physiology of cardiac auscultation. Pediatric Clinics of North America, 51(6), 1515–1535.
📄
3M Littmann Classic II SE Stethoscope Specifications
Available at littmann.com or by contacting SurgoMed directly.
SEARCH ×